Background
Audits of operative summaries and pathology reports reveal wide discordance in identifying the extent of lymphadenectomy performed (the communication gap). We tested the ability of a pre-labeled lymph node specimen collection kit and checklist to narrow the communication gap between operating surgeons, pathologists, and auditors of surgeons’ operation notes.
Methods
We conducted a prospective single cohort study of lung cancer resections performed with a lymph node collection kit from November 2010 to January 2013. We used the kappa statistic to compare surgeon claims on a checklist of lymph node stations harvested intraoperatively, to pathology reports, and an independent audit of surgeons’ operative summaries. Lymph node collection procedures were classified into 4 groups based on the anatomic origin of resected lymph nodes: mediastinal lymph node dissection, systematic sampling, random sampling and no sampling.
Results
From the pathology report, 73% of 160 resections had a mediastinal lymph node dissection or systematic sampling procedure, 27% had random sampling. The concordance with surgeon claims was 80% (kappa statistic 0.69 [CI 0.60 – 0.79]). Concordance between independent audits of the operation notes and either the pathology report (kappa 0.14 [0.04 – 0.23]), or surgeon claims (kappa 0.09 [0.03 – 0.22]), was poor.
Conclusion
A pre-labeled specimen collection kit and checklist significantly narrowed the communication gap between surgeons and pathologists in identifying the extent of lymphadenectomy. Audit of surgeons’ operation notes did not accurately reflect the procedure performed, bringing its value for quality improvement work into question.
Introduction
Although thorough pathologic nodal staging provides the greatest prognostic information in patients with potentially curable non-small cell lung cancer, N1 nodal metastasis is frequently missed. We tested the impact of corrective intervention with a novel pathology gross dissection protocol on intrapulmonary lymph node retrieval.
Methods
Retrospective review of consecutive lobectomy, or greater, lung resection specimens over a period of 15 months before and 15 months after training Pathologist's Assistants on the novel dissection protocol.
Results
141 specimens were examined before and 121 specimens after introduction of the novel dissection protocol. The median number of intrapulmonary lymph nodes retrieved increased from 2 to 5 (p<.0001), and the 75th – 100th percentile range of detected intrapulmonary lymph node metastasis increased from 0 – 5 to 0 – 17 (p=.0003). In multivariate analysis, the extent of resection, examination period (pre- or post-intervention), and pathologic N1 (vs. N0) status were most strongly associated with a higher number of intrapulmonary lymph nodes examined.
Conclusions
A novel pathology dissection protocol is a feasible and effective means of improving the retrieval of intrapulmonary lymph nodes for examination. Further studies to enhance dissemination and implementation of this novel pathology dissection protocol are warranted.
Atrial flutter (AF) is the second most common supraventricular tachyarrhythmia following atrial fibrillation. We present an interesting case of a diagnostic challenge manifested as an electrocardiogram (ECG) recording mimicking AF in a patient with Parkinson's disease (PD). A 72-year-old African-American female with history of PD presented to our Emergency Department with a one day history of chest pain. Her vital signs were within normal limits. Physical exam was remarkable for bilateral resting hand tremors at a frequency of 6-8 hertz and mild cogwheel rigidity in both upper extremities. Initial ECG was interpreted as AF prompting admission. After careful review of her ECG by a cardiologist, several features such as, sharply contoured upright p waves in all leads, different flutter wave morphologies in the same leads, more prominence of "pseudo-flutter" waves in the limb leads compared to the precordial leads, and return to isoelectric baseline after sharp peaked p waves, questioned the diagnosis of AF. A repeat 12 lead ECG clearly demonstrated normal sinus rhythm, and the patient remained completely asymptomatic throughout the stay. A 48-hour Holter monitoring in the clinic later confirmed consistent sinus rhythm with no evidence of any arrhythmias Tremor induced artifacts can be mistaken for arrhythmias. Correct and accurate diagnosis is critically important, in order to avoid wrong treatment and unnecessary interventions. Our case illustrates the importance of recognizing artifact related ECG changes to prevent unnecessary treatment and hospital admissions.
7569 Background: LN metastasis impairs survival of resectable NSCLC, but routine pathologic nodal staging is suboptimal. We tested the impact of a dual intervention (a surgical specimen collection kit with specific, pre-labeled LN collection cups, to improve intraoperative hilar/mediastinal LN dissection; and a fastidious gross dissection of the resected lung specimen for perihilar/intrapulmonary LNs) on the rate of detection of LN metastasis. Methods: We matched dual intervention cases with controls performed with standard surgical specimen collection and pathology examination protocols. Controls were hierarchically matched for extent of resection, laterality, surgeon, pathologist and T-stage. All statistical comparisons were made with Exact Conditional Logistic Regression, to account for the matched case-control design. Results: Patient demographic, tumor histology, and size characteristics were similar between the groups. The impact of the dual interventions is shown in the Table. Conclusions: The dual interventions significantly increased retrieval of N1 and N2 LNs, the rate of detection of LN metastasis, and nodal up-staging. There were strong trends towards higher aggregate stage and increased adjuvant therapy eligibility. The interventions may improve stage-adjusted survival by improving stage accuracy, and improve aggregate survival by increasing the appropriate use of post-operative adjuvant therapy. A prospective randomized trial to test survival impact of the dual interventions is at an advanced planning phase. [Table: see text]
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